Tuesday 22 February 2011

Iraqi Fulbrighter

Written & Posted by:
Bashdar H. Jalal
KDI School for Public Policy & Management
Seoul-Korea

     Goran S. Ghafour is a Kurdish Fulbright student in the United States of America has published his book titled “Iraqi Fulbrighter” successfully. The book deals with smashing fear and wrong understanding between US-Middle East relations by people.

      The writer wants to indicate the negative impacts of the wrong understanding and its reflections between both sides. However, such kind of understanding has made influenced the westerners to have unhealthy point of view to Middle-East countries. In addition to, the book has shed a light on the western media channels in which they have a great impact to show a negative image of the states in the Middle-East, because they do not indicate a true face of the Middle-Eastern people.
However, the writer has two major aims in which want to encourage and influence the western journalists to change their behavior about this sensitive issue and attempt to smash fear by westerners. He would like to show up the westerners have became a victim of media about the reality of Middle-East.

      Finally, I wish the western people would not become a victim of wrong rolling media
about this sensitive and I encourage them to open their eyes for better understanding
between each other.

For more information to reach this book, please visit to the following address.

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Saturday 12 February 2011

The Value of Korean Family

Written & Posted by: Bashdar H. Jalal
Seoul-Korea

      Family is the most important and valuable part in Korean life, in which father is the head of each family, who is responsible to provide shelter, clothe and daily bread for his  members in the frame of family based on the Confucian tradition. Each man should take the above-said responsibility to approve his marriage process and bless his family. In addition to, the eldest brother has a particular responsibility in the family such as keeping eye on his youngest brothers and sisters in their everyday life, and then he is responsible to his family, such as his sons, wife as well as daughters. However, father has another duty in which protecting the financial welfares and provide a bright future for his family. There are five basic factors to build relationship in Korean society, for example ruler and subject, husband and wife, parents and children, brothers and sisters as well as friends and friends. On the other hand, Korean culture is established based on the Confucianism in which rooted in Korea and other eastern Asian states. So, its complex principles have a great impact on each Korean individual in his/her everyday life.
      Korean family was great in the previous time, in which each family was consisted into more than eight members, and they lived under same shelter. However, most of the families lived in the villages and countryside and took their ancestors name in their hometown, but the Korean family becomes smaller in which contains into four members, because of the industrial wave that has impacts on every aspects of life. Despite the industrial issues have pushed most of the Korean families to the giant provinces such as the capital of Seoul and Pusan, but the Korean families still insist to protect their basic principles in the Korean society. The most meaningful evidence for this issue is Korean Chusok and the New Year Day that the Korean people gather around one table to renew their ancestor’s ancient tradition.

     Finally, Korean society still remains in touch with their traditional and moral aspects which are received from ancestors, and also they try hard to protect their basic principles by teaching the new generations. However, the Korean families struggle to remain in peace and comfortable in the frame of marriage lock as well as with others, including foreigners.

Wednesday 9 February 2011

Kurds

Kurds are people living in Kurdistan. About half of the world’s 25 to 30 million Kurds live in Turkey. Six million live in Iran; 3.5 million live in Iraq; and 1.5 million live in Syria. Others are distributed through the countries of Armenia, Germany, Sweden, France, and the United States. A few Kurdish settlements remain in the countries of the former Soviet Union. Kurds speak Kurdish, a language of the western Iranian branch of the Indo-European languages. Kurds who live in Kurdistan often live in rural districts; a few keep up a nomadic or semi-nomadic life style. These Kurds still retain the traditional tribal organization under chiefs. They traditionally herded sheep and goats in the mountains where some still take their livestock to pastures in summer and return to valley villages in the winter. Other Kurds are settled farmers. Agriculture and animal holding are central for their economy. The mountainous area in which they live has allowed traditional tribes to flourish.
The mountains have helped mold Kurdish history and culture. The rain and snow run down the rugged mountainsides and spill into the lowlands. This fills the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers. Because of such a high level of precipitation the soil is rich. This land in Kurdistan (28%) is suitable for farming wheat (1).
The land is unfit for farming higher in the mountains. This is where herders pasture their animals. The herders use animals for their meat and milk (1). There are many natural resources in Kurdistan. There are vast oil reserves and copper, chromium, and iron are still mined (1). Long ago, the mountains were known as great sources for many of the mentioned metal ores but the amount is significantly lower now.
Kurds love music, poetry and dancing. Many Kurdish villages have their own dances. Romance and heroism are usually the theme of dances or folk legends. Kurdish musicians play a type of flute (zornah) and drum (dohol) (1). Most Kurds follow the teachings of Islam. The Kurds have a long history of being in a tension-filled region. The Kurdish culture has survived even though they have never had a country to call their own.
The Kurd’s fight for independence has been continuously blocked. Since World War 1, Turkey, Iran, and Iraq have all stopped Kurdish uprisings. The Persian Gulf War offered hope, but even after defeat Iraq’s leaders maintained control. This is an ongoing struggle, a struggle that will probably not be won the next few years. One hope for the independence struggle is that Iran and Iraq are not favored nations among the world powers. If these nations become weaker, the fight for independence might gain more momentum.
With the absence of a central government, many Kurd’s considered their clan leaders to be their highest source of authority (1). This has proven to be an obstacle to Kurdish independence since many have been loyal to local leaders instead of national leaders.

Monday 7 February 2011

Korean Language

Spoken by nearly 70 million people, Korean ranks among the major languages of the world. Although most speakers of Korean live on the Korean Peninsula and its adjacent islands, more than three million are scattered throughout the world on every continent.
The origin of the Korean language is as obscure as the origin of the Korean people. In the 19th century when Western scholars "discovered" the Korean language, this was the first question they raised. These scholars proposed various theories linking the Korean language with Ural-Altaic, Japanese, Chinese, Tibetan, Dravidian Ainu, Indo-European and other languages. Among these, only the relationship between Korean and Altaic (which groups the Turkic, Mongolian and Manchu-Tungus languages) on the one hand and between Korean and Japanese on the other have continuously attracted the attention of comparative linguists in the 20th century.
Altaic, Korean and Japanese exhibit similarities not only in their general structure, but also share common features such as vowel harmony and lack of conjunctions, although the vowel harmony in old Japanese has been the object of dispute among specialists in the field. Moreover, it has been found that these languages have various common elements in their grammar and vocabulary. Although much work remains to be done, research seems to show that Korean is probably related to both Altaic and Japanese.
According to early historical records, two groups of languages were spoken in Manchuria and on the Korean Peninsula at the dawn of the Christian era: the Northern or Buyo group and the southern or Han group. Around the middle of the seventh century the kingdom of Silla conquered the kingdoms of Baekje in the southwest and Goguryo in the north, and its language became dominant on the peninsula. As a result, the linguistic unification of the peninsula was achieved on the basis of the Silla language.
After the peninsula was unified, the Goryo Dynasty was founded in the 10th century, and the capital was moved to Gaesong in the center of the Korean Peninsula. The dialect of Gaesong became the standard for the national language. When the Choson Dynasty was founded at the end of the 14th century, the capital was moved to Seoul. However, since Seoul is geographically close to Gaesong, this had no significant effect on the development of the language.
Korean Script
The Korean script which is now generally called Hangul was invented in 1443 under Sejong (r.1418 - 50), the fourth king of the Joseon Dynasty, who called it Hunminjeongum (proper sounds to instruct the people). However, the script was not promulgated until the appearance in a document which was also called Hunminjeongum in 1446

The motivation behind the invention of Korean script, according to Sejong's preface to the above book, was to enable the Korean people to write their own language in their own way. Until the introduction of Hunminjeongum, only Chinese characters were used to write, by the upper classes. There also seems to have been a secondary motivation behind the development of Korean script, that of representing the "correct" sounds of Chinese characters.
In producing the Korean script, Sejong and the scholars who assisted him probably referred to several writing systems such as Chinese old seal characters, the Uighur script and the Mongolian scripts, but the system of the Korean script is based upon their phonological studies. Above all, they developed a theory of tripartite division of the syllable into initial, medial and final, as opposed to the bipartite division of traditional Chinese phonology.
The initial sounds (consonants) are represented by 16 letters of which there are five basic forms. According to the explanations of the original Hunminjeongum text,
(k) depicts the root of the tongue blocking the throat;
(n) depicts the outline of the tongue touching the upper palate;
(m) depicts the outline of the mouth;
(s) depicts the outline of the incisor; and
(g) depicts the outline of the throat.
The other initial letters were derived by adding strokes to the basic letters. No letters were invented for the final sounds, the initial letters being used for that purpose. The original Hunminjeongum text also explains that the medial sounds (vowels) are represented by 11 letters of which there are three basic forms:
(a) is a depiction of Heaven;
(eu) is a depiction of Earth; and,
(i) is a depiction of man. By combining these three signs the other medial letters are formed.
After the promulgation of the Korean alphabet, its popularity gradually increased, especially in modern times, to the point where it replaced Chinese characters as the main system of writing in Korea. One of the characteristics of the Korean script is the syllabic grouping of the initial, medial and final letters. However, Korean script is essentially different from such syllabic writing systems as Japanese Kana. It is an alphabetic system which is characterized by syllabic grouping. Some examples are the following:
(na-mu) "tree."
(sa-ram) "man," and
(son-nim) "guest".
Standard Language and Dialects
Modern Korean is divided into six dialects: Central, Northwest, Northeast, Southeast, Southwest and Jeju. Except for the Jeju dialect, these are similar enough for speakers of the various dialects to understand each other. This is due to the fact that Korea has been a centralized state for more than a thousand years with the language of the capital exercising a steady influence on the language spoken throughout the country.
The language of the capital was established as the basis for modern standard Korean in 1936, as a result of the deliberations of a committee organized by the Korean Language Research Society. The language of the political and cultural center of a nation usually becomes the standard language through a gradual process. In Korea, however, the case was somewhat different, since the guidelines for the national standard language were determined by a small but dedicated group of scholars during the Japanese occupation. They worked to preserve their own language in the face of an oppressive regime which sought the eventual extinction of the Korean language.

Saturday 5 February 2011

Geography of Korea

Korea is a small penninsula on the far East side of Asia. It is between China and Japan. It is connected to mainland Asia in the North. It is separated from China and Russia by the Yalu River and the Tuman River. Between Korea and Japan is the East Sea. To the West between Korea and China is the Yellow Sea. The size of Korea is roughly 1,000 kilometers in length.
Korea is a divided country. At the End of World War II in 1948, Korea was divided at the 38th parallel. This resulted in North Korea and South Korea. North Korea became communist, while South Korea did not. (This was based on the deal at the end of the War, dividing the country in two just as Germany had been). North Korea is also known as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, and South Korea is also known as the Republic of Korea. South Korea, or the Republic of North Korea is slightly larger in physical size, while South Korea's population size is about twice as large as North Korea's population size. The fact that this division occurred has left both North and South Korea on the bridge of war